Thursday 31 January 2019

TRAUMBERUF PILOT?




Laut einer Schulabgängerumfrage liegt die Tätigkeit als Pilot an dritter Stelle von allen Wunschberufen. Das bedeutet auch, dass sich hunderttausende junger Leute für den Pilotenberuf interessieren.



Autorin Doris Daily:
“Hätte ich das nur alles vorher gewusst, wäre meine Flugausbildung ganz anders verlaufen”, so dachte ich oft im Nachhinein.  Warum findet sich keine Beratung zu dem Thema?

“Aber ich habe die Aufgabe in Angriff genommen diesen Ratgeber zu schreiben, und es hat dann auch wirklich Freude gemacht.

  Um den Lesern einen objektiven Leitfaden an die Hand zu geben, wurden natürlich auch die weniger positiven Seiten dieses “Traum-Berufes” detailliert aufgezeigt.”  Das Buch ist derzeit erhältlich in deutscher Sprach (die Englische Version ist in Arbeit).  Käufer der Print-Version erhalten die eBook Ausgabe auf Wunsch kostenlos per email zugesandt.

Die “Bibel für angehende Piloten” geht nicht nur auf die europäische Piloten-Ausbildung und die Berufsmöglichkeiten ein, sondern will auch die weltweiten Perspektiven aufzeigen.

Alles – wirklich alles – was Sie als angehender Pilot wissen müssen, finden Sie in diesem praktischen Ratgeber fuer Berufs- und Helikopterpiloten (jetzt in der 4. Auflage):

Berufschancen, Einsatzmöglichkeiten für Berufspiloten Ausbildungskosten,
Gehälter, Ausbildungsmöglichkeiten Weltweit, Arbeitsbereiche und Pilotenalltag,
DLR Pilotentest-Vorbereitungskurse, und ein komplettes Adressenverzeichnis von europäischen Luftfahrt-Ausbildungsbetrieben und Luftverkehrsgesellschaften fuer die Jobsuche.



Piloten Training, Jobsuche, Berufsalltag, Ausbildungswege in Deutschland, Österreich, Schweiz, USA, Australia & Südafrika
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ISBN Electronic book
978-1-988664-04-0
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ISBN Print book
978-1-988664-03-3
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Im Buchhandel erhältlich – oder online
von Kobo, Amazon, Apple, B&N, Scribd etc.

Und weltweit mit dem Universal Link:
https://www.books2read.com/u/4DoxPr
zum Beispiel in Europa: Weltbild / Thalia / Tolino / Hugendubel


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Wednesday 30 January 2019

Pilot Jobs Snapshot




Qatar Airways Doha, Qatar 
Direct Entry A350 First Officer
Qatar Airways is currently in need of type rated and current
Minimum of 1,000 hours Multi Crew, Multi-Engine Jet
commercial airline experience.
Type-rated and currently flying on the A380/A350/A340/A330
with 500 hours minimum on type.
First Officers Airbus - Full Time
Reference: GAJ/QR/A350DEFO
https://www.globalaviationjobs.com/jobs/6730213-direct-entry-a350-first-officer-at-qatar-airways

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Edelweiss Switzerland is currently looking for A330/A340 Captains
Minimum requirements:
EASA ATPL
Valid Airbus rating (A330 / A340 / A350) or A320 Type rating with 1000 hours on type
Swiss Nationals or
Swiss citizen or citizen of the EU-25 / EFTA with a residence permit C
https://www.flyedelweiss.com/DE/inform/services/Pages/services-on-board.aspx

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Air Fast Indonesia is looking for DHC6 pilots
Requirements:
ICAO CPL and current Instrument rating & rated for the aircraft
Holding Type Rating: DHC6-300/400
Total flight time min: 3000 hours
Total PIC multi-engine time min: 1500 hours
Total on type min: 250 hours
Minimum 5 years working experience as Captain
https://www.aviationjobs.me/

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Aero Link, China 
Gulfstream 650 Pilots - Full Time
ONLY ACCEPT TYPE RATED PILOTS and CHINESE SPEAKERS
Reference: GAJ/AeroLink/G650CS/China
Current on the respective types
English Proficiency Level ICAO 4 or above
https://www.globalaviationjobs.com/jobs/7590821-g650-pilots-at-aero-link

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BV234/CH-47/UH-60 Fire Pilots – Canada, USA & Europe
Helicopter Pilots Coulson Aircrane Ltd. • Port Alberni, British Columbia, Canada Position Type: Permanent Job Description: Seeking interested helicopters pilots with CH47D/UH60A experience in fire and construction operations for full-time employment.
https://helijobs.net/2019/01/bv234-ch-47-uh-60-fire-pilots-canada-usa-europe/

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R22/R44 Chief Flight Instructor – Logan, Utah
Job Description:
The Utah State University Aviation Technology program is seeking a Rotorcraft Chief Flight Instructor who has experience in the aviation industry or military, as a pilot with all applicable FAA Certificates. The applicant must be currently qualified to act as Chief Instructor and teach CFI initial applicants as outlined in the FAR’s (both part 61 and 141)
https://helijobs.net/2019/01/r22-r44-chief-flight-instructor-utah/


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Tuesday 29 January 2019

Aviation News from Thailand, Germany, USA



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Airbus, Thai Firm to Collaborate on Pilot Training
Airbus and Thailand's Civil Aviation Training Centre (CATC) have signed a memorandum of understanding to collaborate in developing and implementing aircraft maintenance training and pilot training courses.
The aircraft manufacturer says it has started work with CATC on basic aircraft maintenance training courses, as well as ab initio flight training courses for pilots.
Read more: 
https://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/airbus-thai-firm-to-collaborate-on-mro-and-pilot-tr-455320/
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VIDEO
Pittsburgh Aviation Animal Rescue Team
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=1&v=yqqkGHBp2TE
#Airplanes #DogRescue

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Volunteer Pilots Help Tell the Story of Rising Sea Levels
General aviation pilots who volunteer for LightHawk, a flight-based conservation organization, recently caught a glimpse into the future of rising sea levels and impacts on both coasts from climate change.
The pilots joined forces with the Surfrider Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to the protection of clean water and healthy beaches, on Jan. 22, 2019, to capture photos of king tides.
https://generalaviationnews.com/2019/01/26/volunteer-pilots-help-tell-the-story-of-rising-sea-levels/#more-125097
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RyanAir Bought Remains of LaudaMotion
Ryanair has acquired the remaining quarter of its Austrian unit Laudamotion for an undisclosed sum.  Europe's largest budget carrier previously owned a 75% stake in Laudamotion.  Former Formula One racing champion Niki Lauda, who last year bought back and re-branded the airline he founded, gave Ryanair the option to buy the whole carrier.
Read more:
https://www.rte.ie/news/business/2019/0129/1026190-ryanair-laudamotion-deal/

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They Try to Trick Everyone on Everything…
DFS successful in a case against Ryanair regarding fees
DFS was successful in its bid to demand fees based on aircraft weight from Ryanair. The fees stem from 24 occasions of missed payment between 2012 and 2013. The legal dispute involved additional claims by DFS for approach and departure fees amounting to almost EUR 500,000.
Read more:
https://centreforaviation.com/

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Training Offer:
ERAU Adds Human Factors Classes to its Continuing Education
Courses begin in late February and run until mid-July.
ERAU provides open-enrollment seminars and can create customized training programs to meet the needs of the aviation industry.
Read more:
https://www.flyingmag.com/embry-riddle-human-factors-class

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AOPA Fly-Ins 2019
In celebration of its 80th anniversary, AOPA will host three grand, two-day fly-ins for the 2019 season. Returning to two previous favorite fly-in locations and one brand-new destination, these aviation festivities will run all day Friday and Saturday, and will feature expanded exhibit hours, seminars, workshops, aircraft displays, and special aerial demonstrations.
May 10/11 at AOPA’s headquarters in Frederick, MD
June 21/22 in Livermore, CA
Sept. 13/14 in Tullahoma, TN
Read more:
https://www.aopa.org/news-and-media/all-news/2018/december/19/2019-aopa-fly-in-locations-revealed

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Monday 28 January 2019

What the Brexit Means for Airbus

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It could be a dramatic impact for Airbus: The aircraft manufacturer is a symbol of the European division of labor - most of the wings come from England, where the group employs 14,000 people.  Group CEO Tom Enders has had the Group's emergency plans prepared early as a "no-take" as a "basic assumption".

Airbus sources more than 10,000 aircraft parts from the island, including thousands of suppliers.  As soon as a part of the certification of the European air safety agency EASA is missing, the production would have to be stopped.  Because of the fully loaded factories, the backlog could not catch up, according to Airbus.

That costs a billion euros per week but must be calculated with several weeks.  Even the formation of extra reserves for the worst case cost already billions - not to mention a permanently wingless Airbus...



Sunday 27 January 2019

Info-Veranstaltungen European Flight Academy





Die European Flight Academy der Lufthansa Group Airlines bietet mehrere Info-Veranstaltungen zur Pilotenausbildung im Februar und März 2019 an.  Wie wird man Pilot?  Die Lufthansa Group bietet mit ihren Airlines Möglichkeiten, die die ganze Welt umspannen. Die Ausbildungsprogramme (ATPL und MPL), können beide in ein Cockpit bei einer unserer Airlines führen.

Info-Veranstaltungstermine:

- Kloten-Zürich, Schweiz, in Deutsch, 06.02.2019 & 06.03.2019, beide von 10:30 – 14:00

- Düsseldorf, in Deutsch, 07.02.2019, von 06:00 – 10:00

- Frankfurt am Main, in Deutsch, 15.02.2019, von 05:00 – 09:00

- Hamburg, in Deutsch, 22.02.2019, von 05:00 – 09:00


Keine Zeit um diese Veranstaltungen zu besuchen?
Dann können Sie auch das Live Chat verwenden, um Fragen zu stellen:

Deutsch oder Englisch
am 28.02.2019, von 05:30 – 09:00 oder
am 29.03.2019, von 06:30 – 10:00


Anmeldungen auf der Webseite:
https://www.european-flight-academy.com/info-event-anmeldung

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Friday 25 January 2019

Jean Batten World-Class Aviatrix from New Zealand






If you ever departed from Auckland, New Zealand (or if you live there) you might have seen a grey Percival Gull monoplane hanging overhead a couple of duty-free stores in the international airport terminal.  In fact, the terminal is named after Jean Batten.  The upper walls of this terminal are decorated with an image of New Zealand’s most famous women pilot.  

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How it All Began:
Though she was a gifted pianist, at age eighteen she decided to become a pilot after the Australian pilot Charles Kingsford Smith took her for a flight in his Southern Cross airplane.  In 1929 she moved with her mother to England, to join the London Aeroplane Club.  Jean Batten gained her private and commercial licenses in 1932 and started her long-distance flights around the world.

Later, she received an endorsement contract with Castrol Oil and several awards for her achievements.  Local Maori honored her with a feather cloak and she was named “Hine-o-te-Rangi” – "Daughter of the Skies”.  

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Jean Batten also wrote books: 
My Life
Paperback
https://www.amazon.com/Jean-Batten-Zealands-Greatest-Woman/dp/1906393192
There is also a Collectable Version of My Life
https://www.amazon.com/My-life-Jean-BATTEN/dp/B001L19UYE/

Alone in the Sky 
by Jean Batten
Paperback and Hardcover
https://www.amazon.com/Alone-Sky-Jean-Batten/dp/0906393019/

Solo Flight is still available in digital format through the New Zealand Electronic Text Collection in Wellington.
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Jean Batten flew solo from Britain to New Zealand in the 1930s.  Born in Roturoa, New Zealand, in 1909, the famous aviatrix, died an infamously obscure death in Palma de Majorca, Spain - the antipode of NZ.  In 1982 she was bitten by a dog on the island of Majorca.  She refused treatment and the wound became infected. 
She died alone in a hotel in Majorca, from complications due to the dog bite.  The world only learned about her death five years later, as she was buried in a paupers grave.  In the Palma suburb of La Bonanova, not far from where Batten died, there's now a newly re-christened street called Carrer de Jean Batten, or Jean Batten St.
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Jean Batten: The Garbo of the Skies
She was the sweetheart of the nation in the mid-1930s when she made her pioneering solo flights, but thereafter she pretty much turned her back on New Zealand.   She is remembered in some ways, forgotten in others.  

Around the country, there are several statues, streets, a park and a school named after her, and even a couple of mountain peaks.   And a dramatic statue of Jean Batten still stands outside the terminal in Auckland.  However, not every Kiwi is aware of her significance to New Zealand’s aviation and to the airport.
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Women Fly Just as Good as Men
For young New Zealand women, she was a role model and showed that women could fly just as good as men - and even outperform them at times.  Her amazing achievements include, among others, these flights:

  • 1933 Great Britain – India in a Gipsy Moth open biplane
  • 1934 Great Britain – Australia in less than 15 days in a Gipsy Moth open biplane
  • 1935 Australia - England in 17 days and 15 hours
  • 1935 Great Britain – Brasilia in 61 hours in a Percival Vega Gull
  • 1936 Great Britain – New Zealand in 11 days in a Percival Vega Gull, accompanied only by her cat.

Record-Breaking Trans-World Flights
These flights all took place in tiny airplanes with no navigational equipment, no air traffic control, barely any maps, and difficulties to even get fuel and technical support anywhere along the route!  
With this meager equipment, today's pilots would have been lost… Jean Batten even survived several crash-landings, but never gave up. 
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In 1935 Jean Batten broke James Mollison's records for the flight England to Brazil and also Dakar to Natal, and became the first woman to fly solo across the South Atlantic.  She also shared a Harmon Trophy with Amelia Earhart in 1935.




After two failed attempts to fly from England to Australia, Jean made her comeback with a record-breaking return journey in 1934.

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Her Cat Flew With Her From England to New Zealand
Her success elevated in 1935 when she became the first woman to ever fly solo across the South Atlantic, and then it soared in 1936 when Jean and her lucky black cat, Buddy, made the first-ever direct flight from England to New Zealand. She described the moment the wheels hit the turf as “the very greatest moment of my life,” proving to the world that the sky’s only the limit if you let it.
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WWII Ended Batten's Flying Adventures
Her Gull was commissioned to active service and Batten was not permitted to fly it.  During the war, she was involved in campaigns, giving lectures in England to raise money for guns and airplanes, but her flying days - unfortunately - were over.

Jean Batten was one of the great aviation megastars of the 1930s.  Her spectacular flights ranked with those of Britain's Amy Johnson and America's Amelia Earhart.  Yet, despite her brilliance as a pilot, she remained the least well-known of them all.

Resources:
Ian Mackersey: Jean Batten: The Garbo of the Skies
Warner Books, London 1992
ISBN 0-7088-5332-3 available through Goodreads.com
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/21108608-jean-batten

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Batten                                                                                                                                                                                              
https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/the-flying-ace-known-as-the-greta-garbo-of-the-skies-who-ended-in-a-paupers-grave-34824642.html

http://www.new-zealand-vacations-in-west-auckland.com/jean-batten.html

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Thursday 24 January 2019

7 Attractive Scholarships in Aviation




Any degree in aviation comes with a fairly substantial tab to cover fees and flight costs.  Scholarships and grants can help defer these costs.  The aviation scholarships listed here are only a small example of what’s out there, they will start you finding scholarships and funding your aviation education. 
Applicants must have demonstrated involvement in aviation-related activities, such as but not limited to, flight training, aviation clubs, employment in an aviation-related field, and have a membership in organizations such as EAA, AOPA, etc.  An internship at an aviation company is highly encouraged.
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Dean Humphrey Scholarship   
The Wichita Aero Club is creating a scholarship for college or postgraduate students in honor of former Cessna Public Relations Chief Dean Humphrey.  Applicants shall be pursuing an associate’s degree or a bachelor’s degree and must be a resident of the United States or authorized to work in the United States.
https://wichitacf.org/scholarships/available-scholarships

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GAMA Scholarship Award
The General Aviation Manufacturers Association (GAMA) is now taking applications for its Edward W. Stimpson "Aviation Excellence” Scholarship Award" which comes with a $2,000 cash prize. 
The scholarship goes to a graduating high school senior who will be enrolled in an aviation degree core program at a university or college of his or her choice.  Applicants are judged on the basis of their academic skills, extracurricular activities, and an essay on what general aviation means to the student and how he or she plans to pursue a career in the general aviation industry.
https://gama.aero/opportunities-in-ga/scholarships/
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Whirly-Girls Scholarship Fund
Whirly-Girls International is a nonprofit, educational and charitable organization dedicated to advancing women in helicopter aviation. The organization offers 16 scholarships for a variety of initiatives and training in general aviation.  Scholarships range from $950 to $14,000.  Applicants must be helicopter pilots with at least a private certificate/license and a Whirly-Girl or female associate member.  The next scholarship season will open in the summer of 2023.
https://whirlygirls.org/apply-for-scholarships/

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ICAS Foundation: With several active scholarships available to future aspiring pilots and performers, the Foundation's goal is to help support these young men and women's education to provide the air show and aviation industry with its future leaders.  Applications to scholarships@icasfoundation.org   
Deadline December 31 of each year for the following scholarships:
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Sean DeRosier Memorial Scholarship
The recipient must be a male or female between the ages of 17 and 31. The recipient must use the scholarship to acquire aerobatic flight training (a private pilot’s license is required) or an A&P license (a private pilot’s license is not required).  Scholarship Amount: $1,500.
https://www.icasfoundation.org.uk/what-we-offer/school-college-universities

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Jan Jones Memorial Scholarship
The scholarship provides a grant to be applied toward aerobatic training.  The recipient must be a female, hold a private pilot's license, and write a short essay on why she wants to learn aerobatics. The recipient must be a female holding a private pilot certificate and must use the scholarship for aerobatic flight training.  Scholarship Amount: $2,000.
https://www.icasfoundation.org.uk/what-we-offer/school-college-universities
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Lovelace-Drake Memorial Scholarship

The scholarship provides continued pilot training in either tailwheel operation or aerobatic flying so the recipient might increase his or her aeronautical knowledge and insight, and in turn, make a contribution of service back to the aviation community. The recipient of the Lovelace-Drake scholarship will receive the Basic Aerobatic course from Grayout Aerosports at the Indianapolis Regional Airport, KMQJ.  Scholarship Amount: $2,000.
https://icasfoundation.org/scholarships/loveland-drake-memorial-scholarship/

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AOPA Scholarships
However, one of the best scholarships in aviation can be found at the AOPA: The aircraft owners and pilots association will award 100 scholarships of $10,000 each! to 80 exceptional aviation-minded high school students ages 15 to 18.
Air Line Pilots Association Scholarship
Children of medically retired, long-term disabled or deceased pilot members of the Air Line Pilots Association are eligible for the Air Line Pilots Association Scholarship Program. The total monetary value is $12,000, with $3,000 disbursed annually to the recipient for four consecutive years provided that a 3.0 GPA is maintained. Application Deadline: 5/1/2023
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MBTA Educational Foundation Scholarships
Amount: $2,000. The MBTA has a separate 501(c) 3 charitable foundation that awards scholarships through the MBTA Educational Foundation. Most of the money raised for the scholarships comes from the Foundation’s annual Super Raffle. Preference may be given to students attending Maine universities or colleges. Application Deadline: 9/15/2023
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National Aviation Explorer Scholarships
Amount: $10,000. The National Aviation Exploring Committee awards individual scholarships annually to aviation explorers pursuing a career in the aviation industry. The intent of these scholarships is to identify and reward those individuals who best exemplify the qualities that lead to success in the aviation industry. Application Deadline: 4/30/2023
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Navigate Your Future Scholarship
Amount: $2,500. The Navigate Your Future Scholarship is offered to a high school graduate continuing his or her education in the aviation industry. Eligible applicants must be enrolled or accepted into an undergraduate aviation-related program at an accredited college or university. Recipients will be notified by the end of July and all other applicants will be notified by mid-August. Application Deadline: 6/24/2023

Last but Not Least:
It's always best to apply early - don’t wait until the last week or day.  Orthography is the unwritten criterion.  Use paperrater.com or any other spelling or grammar check program for your application and double-check every paragraph carefully.

To keep you informed about the latest free college grants check regularly:

https://www.scholarships.com/financial-aid/college-scholarships/scholarships-by-type/aviation-scholarships/

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DREAM JOB PILOT?

In a Series of Three Editions Explained:
Pros and Cons, Every Day Pilot Life,
Training Possibilities in the UK, Australia
In the USA, Canada, Europe, South Africa,
and the Middle East, and most importantly:
How to Find a Pilot Position
Apple Books, B&N, Kobo, Amazon, etc.
Also available at Thalia in Europe.
https://books2read.com/u/47glDa
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BG12NSRX/
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TO LIVE IS TO FLY: 

Memoirs of an Executive Pilot
https://www.amazon.de/dp/1988664349
https://books2read.com/u/mKYpGd
https://www.thalia.de/shop/home/suggestartikel/ID142447093.html

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Tuesday 22 January 2019

How the Shutdown Hits the US Aviation Industry




The partial government shutdown, now reaching almost one month, is hitting the aviation industry hard.  Air traffic controllers, considered “essential” employees, have been on the job - but without pay.

One NATA member company has two aircraft stranded in Canada as a result of the shutdown.  The newly purchased planes were being painted and need a special FAA approval before they can be flown back to the US.  The halting of FAA knowledge testing and check rides is creating scheduling issues and delays for certain organizations.  Training center evaluators’ qualifications are expiring and there is a backlog of qualifications for flight simulators.

The aviation industry is one of the industries hardest hit by the shutdown, as stopped work on:
  • new aircraft certification, 
  • interactions between FAA and other nations
  • some aircraft registrations
  • commercial drone flight authorizations
  • aircraft mechanic licenses
  • introduction of new air traffic technology 
  • airport construction approvals

Agencies, such as the FAA, are required under law to cease non-essential operations and cannot act while there is a lapse in funding.  When funding does resume, and the shutdown ends, all non-essential operations will restart, creating a backlog of work that will take months to catch up.

This is just an excerpt of the many issues that plague US aviation now, read the long list in this article: 

https://generalaviationnews.com/2019/01/16/aviation-hit-hardest-by-government-shutdown/

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Monday 21 January 2019

Pilot Jobs Snapshot









Direct Entry A350 First Officer
Qatar Airways
Minimum of 1,000 hours Multi Crew, Multi-Engine Jet
commercial airline experience.
Type-rated and currently flying on the A380/A350/A340/A330
with 500 hours minimum on type
https://www.globalaviationjobs.com/jobs/6730213-direct-entry-a350-first-officer-at-qatar-airways
Reference: GAJ/QR/A350DEFO


Falcon 7X / 8X Pilots - China-based 
Captain / First Officer
Immediate availability and experience in China Preferred
https://www.globalaviationjobs.com/jobs/6930659-falcon-7x-8x-pilots-china-base-preferred-at-aero-link
Reference: GAJ/AeroLink/F7XF8X/China


LearJet LR60 Type-Rated First Officers 
El Paso, TX
Sierra West Airlines
http://www.sierrawestairlines.com/careers/
https://aviationjobs.applicantstack.com/x/detail/a2ue0g7il1gd


LearJet 60 First Officer
Location: Boca Raton, Florida, US
Minimum requirements2000 Hours Total Flying Time500 Hours Pilot-In-Command (PIC) Total Time500
https://www.pilotjobs.io/pilot-jobs/Lear-60-First-Officer-32574.html




Heli AS350 B2’s in Northwestern BC, Canada
Silver King Helicopters is looking for Aerial Work Pilots
This position would be Contract or Full Time
– Minimum 2500 hours (1000 hours on Type)
– Mountain precision Drill Move experience
– Heli-Skiing experience considered an asset
– Coastal BC Mountain Experience an asset
https://helijobs.net/2019/01/as350-vrll-aerial-work-pilot-british-columbia-2/

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Sunday 20 January 2019

Wanted: Female Pilots in China





India has the world’s highest proportion of female commercial pilots, at 12 percent.
China’s proportion of female pilots – at 1.3 percent - is one of the world’s lowest, which analysts and pilots attribute to social perceptions and male-centric hiring practices by Chinese airlines.

But Chinese airlines are struggling with an acute pilot shortage amid surging travel demand, and female pilots are drawing attention to the gender imbalance.

Although Chinese women had been trained as military pilots since 1949, no women had been trained to fly commercial flights.  For example, China’s Civil Aviation Flight College did not accept women for helicopter training until 2009.

Chinese carriers will need 128,000 new pilots over the next two decades, according to forecasts by planemaker Boeing Co.  The shortfall has so far prompted airlines to aggressively hire foreign captains and Chinese regulators to relax physical entry requirements for cadets.

“The mission is to start cutting down the thorns that cover this road, to make it easier for those who come after us,” said Chen Jingxian, a Shanghai-based lawyer who learned to fly in the United States and is among those urging change.

Such issues are not confined to China. The proportion of female pilots in South Korea and Japan, where such jobs do not conform to widespread gender stereotypes, is also less than 3 percent.

But in China, female pilots strain to hold up half the sky. The strongest calls for change are coming mostly from Chinese female pilots, thanks to a slew of returnees who learned how to fly while living abroad in countries such as the United States.

Read the whole story by Reuters:
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-airshow-women-pilots/in-china-female-pilots-strain-to-hold-up-half-the-sky-idUSKCN1NA2SP


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JFK: Learned to Fly Seaplanes in Miami




New documents show: US President John F. Kennedy learned to fly a floatplane 
on the base of Embry-Riddle in Miami during World War II.  The training took place in 1944 over ten days.

The findings, confirmed by the Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University archivist Kevin Montgomery, were confirmed by presidential historian Douglas Brinkley, author of the forthcoming book, American Moonshot: JFK and the Great Space Race.  "I would call it a fact that JFK has trained to fly with Embry-Riddle in Miami," said Brinkley, Ph.D., professor of history at Rice University.  The story of Kennedy's flying lessons in Miami began one night in August 1943.

Naval Lieutenant Kennedy commanded the PT-109, a motor torpedo boat patrolling the Solomon Islands, waiting to attack a Japanese naval convoy, an invisible enemy destroyer spreading the much smaller patrol boat, sinking it, and dispersing the crew into the water and wreckage.

Kennedy's catastrophe, shattering salvation, and heroism quickly appeared in newspapers across America, and eventually, this story would help him get into politics and eventually into the presidency.  When Kennedy returned to the States, he served in March 1944 as an instructor for the Navy submarine training center in downtown Miami, while he waited for the operation of the injuries due to the PT-109 accident.
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At the time, Embry-Riddle trained thousands of American and British military airmen on half a dozen South Florida airfields for the war effort.  But the school's founder, John Paul Riddle, still had his original Miami flight school and charter service center - a small seaplane base at Biscayne Bay - which he had opened in 1939.

Nobody knows how this war hero from a famous family at the reception of the flight school asked for flying lessons or what motivated him to learn seaplanes.  He was an avid sailor from a young age, and by this time his older brother flew the PB4Y "Liberators of England" on anti-submarine missions.



The facts of Kennedy's flight training in Miami had been lost over time until Embry-Riddle's Dean Emeritus Bob Rockett had an anecdote nearly 15 years ago that Kennedy had taken flight lessons at Embry-Riddle's naval base when he was in the Navy during World War II was.


In 2004, Rockett, then Dean of the University's Heritage Project, spoke to Helen Hassey ('42, MC, Non-degree), a pioneer aviator who had been a flying instructor on the Embry-Riddle hydroplane base in the 1940s.

"She told me about the day Kennedy came to the Miami base for flight instruction," Rockett said.  "We did not have any information in our archives.  In an attempt to verify Helen's story, I contacted the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and the Boston, Massachusetts Museum.  They told me that they did not have any records that JFK had ever taken flight lessons. "

No further information was available on Kennedy Seaplane history until 2016, when Rockett and Montgomery learned about authenticated pages from a Kennedy-signed logbook on a Shapell Manuscript Foundation website, an Israeli-based organization that researches and collects original manuscripts and historical documents, including American presidents.  "The flights recorded in the protocol took place in May 1944 over 10 days in Miami, in Piper Cub seaplanes, the same type of aircraft used on the seaplane base," said Montgomery.  "I matched the aircraft tail numbers of Kennedy's logbook entries with photos of our seaplane fleet in the archives."
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"Corinne's logbook revealed that two of the log numbers recorded in her log corresponded to those in Kennedy's flight letter, and in one case she flew the same plane on the same day as JFK," Montgomery said.


With all the evidence, Montgomery contacted the presidential historian 
Douglas Brinkley. After examining the documents, Brinkley was convinced
that the Kennedy logbook was authentic and that it had proven 
that J.F.
Kennedy had actually trained with Embry-Riddle.

"JFK was in his log book at Palm Beach with his father in the same weeks," said Brinkley, co-author of JFK: A Vision for America, released on Kennedy's centenary in 2017.  I had a love for aviation and coastal areas, so everything makes sense.  I would call it a fact that JFK has been training to fly with Embry-Riddle in Miami. "

Thanks to a small handful of people at Embry-Riddle and a flight record from Alumna and hydroplane pilot Corinne Smith from 1944, a decade-long legend has been confirmed.

In just ten days in May 1944, Lieutenant John F. Kennedy would switch from his first flying hour to a solo flight.  The logbook ends there.  Records indicate that Kennedy went to a Naval Hospital in Massachusetts just a few days later for back surgery.

According to Brinkley, he abruptly stopped taking flight lessons as soon as D-Day took place on June 6.  Kennedy then retired from the service, applied for the Congressman and eventually became the 35th President of the United States.

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Friday 18 January 2019

AOPA Announced $1Million Scholarship




The aircraft owners and pilots association will award 100 scholarships of $10,000 each to 80 exceptional aviation-minded high school students ages 15 to 18, and up to 20 teachers dedicated to advancing aviation education in their classrooms.

“Scholarship recipients can use their awarded funds to pay direct flight training expenses toward a primary pilot certificate. To be eligible, students and teachers must be AOPA members. Student scholarship recipients must complete a flight training milestone—achieving either their first solo or earning a primary pilot certificate—within one year of receiving a scholarship.” Requirements:

“Teachers who apply for a scholarship must be full-time employees of a school or school system working to prepare students for a future in aviation.”


Application deadline for the "You Can Fly" High School Flight Training Scholarships is April 1, 2019.


The scholarships are made possible by a $1 million grant from the Ray Foundation to the AOPA Foundation, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.
Read more at AOPA’s site:  https://www.aopa.org/


You Can Fly is AOPA’s multi-pronged program to get pilots flying and keep them flying, and to build a larger, more vibrant general aviation community.  A flight training scholarship can be life changing for a recipient who has dreamed of becoming a pilot but considered that goal unattainable.” Read more at AOPA’s site:
https://www.aopa.org/news-and-media/all-news/2019/january/flight-training-magazine/you-can-fly-next-generation


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Thursday 17 January 2019

Aviation News from Vienna, Teheran, Kuala Lumpur




Vienna: Austrian Airlines to spend $228 M, expanding the Airbus fleet
Austrian Airlines will expand its Airbus fleet from the current 36 planes to a total of 46 over the next three years. At the same time, 18 turboprop aircraft with 76 seats will be phased out.  On balance, the flight offering from Vienna will be expanded by more than ten percent.
“This should also be considered as a clear challenge to the increasingly tough competition in Vienna, and we are prepared to take further steps to defend our position at our flight hub in Vienna”, says Austrian Airlines CEO Alexis von Hoensbroech.
Vienna Airport (VIEV.VI), one of Europe’s main hubs for eastern European destinations, introduced an incentive scheme after the collapse of Air Berlin to attract new carriers, which has proved particularly successful with low-cost airlines.


Letzte Passagierflüge mit der Boeing 727
TEHERAN - Iran Aseman Airlines hat ihre letzte aktive Boeing 727 außer Dienst gestellt. Das betagte Muster wurde von keiner anderen Airline länger für Linienflüge mit Passagieren eingesetzt.
Die 727-200 L/N 1603 gehörte bei ihrer Auslieferung im April 1980 an Air France bereits zu den späten Vertretern ihrer Art: Boeing stellte die Produktion der seit 1963 gebauten 727 nach 1.831 Auslieferungen 1984 ein.
https://www.aero.de/news-30741/Letzte-Passagierfluege-mit-der-Boeing-727.html


Cargolux: Feuer und Rauch im Cockpit
Eine Boeing 747-8 von Cargolux hat einen Flug Minuten nach dem Start in Kuala Lumpur abgebrochen.  Die Piloten meldeten Feuer und Rauch im Cockpit.  Die Boeing setzte 35 Minuten nach dem Start wieder sicher in Kuala Lumpur auf, blockierte aber rund zwei Stunden die Start- und Landebahn 32R.
http://avherald.com/

Record Number of Flights from German Airports




According to the Federal Statistical Office, during the summer 2018 timetable from April to October, 80.5 million people departed from Germany's main airports.

That was 2.4 million people or three percent more than the year before, as the authorities in Wiesbaden reported. But the boom was not equally spread.


The number of flights from Germany to other countries has risen. Between April and October, 66.2 million people traveled to other countries, a good 4.3 percent more than in the 2017 summer flight schedule.

More passengers were counted among the tourist destinations in North Africa and Turkey (5.63 million), where the political crises of previous years have receded. Tunisia (337,000) grew by 49.6 percent and Egypt (1.17 million) by 38.3 percent.

The number of passengers to Turkey grew by 20.1 percent and neighboring Greece (3.45 million) also increased significantly with 15 percent.


Spain, the main tourist destination, still had close to 10.5 million tourists, a  growth of 1.8 percent. The Canary Islands (1.73 million) had 1.7 percent fewer passengers than the year before.

Other losers were the US (minus 6.7 percent, 3.59 million) and the Caribbean Islands (minus 12.6 percent, 411,000) - as well as the inner-German air traffic, which lost 2.3 percent (14.3 million). This reflects the bankruptcy of Air Berlin, which at the beginning of the year 2018 had led to a smaller domestic German flight schedule.

Source: jus/dpa/AFP/Spiegel

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Wednesday 16 January 2019

10th Anniversary of The 'Miracle on the Hudson'



Image Wikimedia Commons


10 years ago, on January 15th, 2019, some rogue goose nearly caused a catastrophe when they careened into the engine of an airplane leaving LaGuardia airport. 


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Instead of dooming his vessel to a fiery crash, however, Captain Chesley Sullenberger pulled off a splash landing and safely brought U.S. Airways flight 1549 to rest on the Hudson River, where police, first responders, and regular New Yorkers helped pull all 155 passengers and crew members to safety. 




Birdstrike: Geese and Delta Airplane


Interview with Capt. Sullenberger:
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In the end, it was one of the luckiest days in modern aviation
Thanks to all the heroes who helped to avoid disaster.

Visitors can see the airliner now at the Charlotte, NC,
Aviation Museum



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Austrian Airlines: Route Expansion in Canada






Austrian Airlines expands their Air Canada - Montreal codeshare routes from April 2019 on. 

Austrian Airlines has announced a new, year-round daily flight to Montréal (YUL).  It will launch from its base in Vienna.  This new flight to YUL means that the Lufthansa Group, to which Austrian Airlines belong, offers numerous flights to the Quebec region.
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Planned codeshare routes from 29 April 2019:
Montreal – Calgary 
Montreal – Halifax 
Montreal – Ottawa
Montreal – Vancouver
Montreal – Winnipeg

The service will be operated by the carrier’s Boeing 767-300(ER) aircraft on a daily basis throughout the Summer, and then five times per week during the Winter season.




With this change, Austrian, Lufthansa, and Swiss will all be flying to Montreal, from Frankfurt, Munich, Vienna, and Zurich.  Austrian has a fairly small long-haul fleet, so not surprisingly, this new route is coming at the expense of another destination.  Austrian will discontinue flights between Vienna and Toronto as of April 2019.

Austrian Airlines AG, sometimes shortened to Austrian, is the flag carrier of Austria and a subsidiary of the Lufthansa Group.

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Tuesday 15 January 2019

Canada: Flight to the Northern Lights




See the Northern Lights at eye-level on a private jet flight in Canada.  Travelers desperate to see the Northern Lights can get up close and personal with the phenomenon on a new private flight in Canada. Passengers on board of AirNorth, Yukon’s Airline, should be able to see the lights shortly after take-off and at eye level.
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The trip will run from 7 to 11 February 2019, with the flight taking off on either the 8 or 9 February.  The date will be chosen based on the Aurora forecast for the days, so passengers will have the best chance of getting optimal views.  The five-day trip will include “unique culinary components, industry-leading guest speakers, cultural events, optional day tours and more”, according to the airline.



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Rare Opportunity
Since there are only 80 seats on the flight, it’s going to be a rare opportunity for travelers to take part.  A pilot project of the flight was held last year, and the passengers saw the lights just nine minutes after take-off – and they continued for three hours straight.  Not only that, once you hop on board of the Boeing B737, you will get to enjoy a celebratory gin from the Yukon Brewing company and the Canadian Aurora photographer Neil Zeller will assist with helping passengers take their own photos.

Get all the details here:
https://www.lonelyplanet.com/news/2018/11/06/aurora-borealis-yukon-flight/

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Monday 14 January 2019

Air Colombia: Rare Douglas DC-3 Aircraft




Unforgettable Adventure:
Air Colombia owns three of the venerable models of World War II-era Douglas DC-3 propeller aircraft.  As a so-called raisin bomber, the Douglas DC-3 became famous. Today only a few of the more than 70 years old machines are still in service.

The flights are an unforgettable adventure, so far almost unknown internationally. Many of the passengers aboard are indigenous.

Deutsch:
DC-3-Flug ins Amazonasbecken: 
Rosinenbomber auf Kolumbianisch 
Die DC-3 von Air Colombia ist Baujahr 1942. 
http://spon.de/ae2WW 
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Aviation News from Qatar and China




Qatar Airways Group has announced that as part of its strategy to invest in the strongest airlines around the world and continue enhancing operations and network connectivity it has completed an on-market purchase of certain “A shares” and “H shares” of China Southern Airlines Company Limited. 

“China Southern Airlines is one of the most prestigious airlines in the Chinese domestic market and an important market player in the world, with massive potential for our cooperation in the future.  Given the complementary strengths and resources of each of China Southern Airlines and Qatar Airways, there are opportunities for us to work together and build a long term relationship in ways that would bring benefits to customers of both airlines.”
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In China, female pilots strain to hold up half the sky: Chinese carriers will need 128,000 new pilots over the next two decades. Air China, China Eastern Airlines and China Southern Airlines had all made some effort to recruit more female pilots.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-airshow-women-pilots/in-china-female-pilots-strain-to-hold-up-half-the-sky-idUSKCN1NA2SP

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Bird Strikes And How to Prevent Them




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Flight 1549 reminds us that we’re not the only creatures that travel in the sky... Shortly after Captain Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger took off from New York’s LaGuardia Airport on January 15, 2009, with 154 passengers and crew, two 8-pound geese flew into each of the plane’s twin engines.  

Suddenly both engines weren’t working, and he faced a gut-wrenching decision.  He had to choose between trying to reach an airport runway or attempting a daring water landing.  Captain Sullenberger aimed for the Hudson River, which investigators eventually said was the only choice he could have made that would have saved the plane and its passengers.

It raised awareness about aircraft bird strikes and prompted National Transportation Safety Board investigators to warn airports “to take action to mitigate wildlife hazards before a dangerous event occurs.”

From 1990 to 2016, the annual number of reported bird strikes in the US increased from 1,850 to 13,408, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.  That’s up more than 700%.  Globally, from 2008-2015, the International Civil Aviation Organization said nearly 98,000 bird strikes were reported in 105 nations.  The estimated cost of all aviation bird strikes, according to the European Space Agency, is more than $1 billion a year.
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Read the whole bird-strike article  “Preventing Another ‘Miracle On The Hudson’ Emergency”




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